So you're telling me Obama swung to the right when he started campaigning?
11/8/2012 10:52:37 AM
I'm telling you that even during the 2008 Democratic primary debates, Obama was calling for cost controls and efficiency measures to bolster our current employer-based system. I remember his speeches at the time, and how he opposed Edwards' and Hillary's plans that called for universal coverage. He kept repeating that the problem was excessive cost, not the availability of care. Then he flip-flopped after the election and made it all about spreading coverage, with little in the way of cost controls.[Edited on November 8, 2012 at 11:06 AM. Reason : 2]
11/8/2012 11:06:25 AM
11/8/2012 11:07:59 AM
Yeah, I kinda bungled the wording on that. But his healthcare platofrm in 2008 revolved around lowering healthcare costs, not providing universal coverage.
11/8/2012 11:18:26 AM
it's close enoughfacepalm was directed at our president.
11/8/2012 11:22:35 AM
11/8/2012 3:16:40 PM
11/8/2012 3:17:34 PM
11/8/2012 4:09:24 PM
lol no
11/8/2012 4:12:51 PM
Uh, yes, it is. Preventative care and contraception is more cost-effective than emergency room visits and abortions/unwanted children.
11/8/2012 4:40:45 PM
I mean, it's probably not as cost effective as letting people die in the streets, so the most cost effective option would be repealing EMTALA
11/8/2012 4:41:39 PM
11/8/2012 5:15:38 PM
11/8/2012 5:20:23 PM
11/8/2012 5:35:44 PM
I thought Shrike covered that ... When people need heath care they are in no position to shop around. When they don't need it they don't buy it. On the other side, people that issue it try and limit their costs (i.e. more profit) by not paying for it. That is why we need something other than the profit motive - i.e. some form of health care reform. And it happened all through the private sector (other than the ground-rule regulations).
11/8/2012 6:03:51 PM
11/8/2012 6:39:59 PM
11/8/2012 7:56:49 PM
11/8/2012 10:58:28 PM
11/8/2012 11:30:32 PM
11/8/2012 11:41:27 PM
Some kinds of preventive care save money (esp. vaccinations), but in general, government-subsidized preventive care for all manner of rare disorders costs money and deteriorates health in the long run, as people who aren't really at risk end up motivated by fear to get those low-cost screenings anyway, and some of the better-hyped ones (like mammograms) are inherently dangerous, with the benefits outweighing the danger for only small groups of the population (like the elderly and women with family, and especially personal, histories of breast cancer): http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/feb/10/barack-obama/barack-obama-says-preventive-care-saves-money/
11/9/2012 12:22:08 AM
Even TED has hosted talks damming mammogramshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqbM1ZrpTQgBasically, it's an entrenched culture that we have to do this procedure at a given time for everyone because of the public perception of breast cancer=bad. It's painful and it often doesn't help. The medical establishment had basically started ignoring the facts coming out of research.
11/9/2012 8:24:18 AM
hey now, don't you start coming between me and overpriced pink stuff
11/9/2012 8:39:43 AM
TED is trash and always has been, it's an idiot's idea of what smart people sound like
11/9/2012 9:16:53 AM
Exactly, real researchers don't communicate their ideas to the community through seminars.
11/9/2012 9:52:23 AM
this isn't on topic, but real researchers have issues with the way we do a lot of screenings too, its not just TED talks. at least that is my understanding from print and tv media, so who knows.
11/9/2012 10:29:47 AM
So are you automatically not a real researcher when you give a TED talk? Nothing could be more absurd.There is a problem with the application of research to the practice of mammograms, and I heard about it through TED talks. I'm not a doctor, so it's not like I should have read it through the literature instead. It's as good as a news article, depending on the publication you're reading.
11/9/2012 10:40:04 AM
11/9/2012 11:37:18 AM
The biggest problem with obamacare is that it will save money and people wont understand why. People will confuse the savings from the real cost controls with the smoke and mirrors of the individual mandate. This will make it harder to justify more cost controls.
11/9/2012 11:43:06 AM
11/9/2012 2:32:16 PM
During the Obamacare debate, a proposed cost-control from the Administration was to create a division set up to track typical charges for various procedures. They were going to build up a database of expected costs for different operations, much like how every auto shop uses the same reference book for time and materials spent on oil changes, brake jobs, tune-ups and the like. At the mechanic, it doesn't really matter if one brake job takes 5 hours and the next one only 2. They all bill a standardized 4.2 hours per brake job, plus the cost of new rotors, pads etc. That way they can quote you ahead of time and stick with the quote unless something else is discovered in the process of performing the job. Doctors and hospitals killed this proposal because they saw it as too restrictive.
11/9/2012 2:59:11 PM
11/11/2012 4:09:12 PM
Denny's owner plans 'Obamacare surcharge'A man who owns 40 of the restaurants says he has no choice if he wants to stay in business.http://finance.yahoo.com/news/florida-restaurateur-to-impose-surcharge-for-obamacare.html
11/16/2012 12:12:17 AM
What does that valve to do with this topic?
11/16/2012 6:50:02 AM
Headline: Business owner raises prices/fires employees, claims he has no choice, blames scapegoat, water wet
11/16/2012 9:50:23 AM
actually, it's more like this:Headline: Gov't adds more regulations. Business owner passes cost of compliance onto consumers, as usual
11/30/2012 11:41:32 PM
Pre-obamacare, post-obamacare, vouchers, other proposals... None of them are keeping government out of it. What they all are though is funneling government money to private companies.Privatization. It's a problem, we have no free market solution even being proposed
1/9/2013 7:09:03 PM
1/10/2013 1:25:11 PM
^lol. you're right, no business has ever managed to succeed after increasing their prices or charging more than a competitor.when the government makes it more expensive to run a business, of course many of them will raise prices to compensate. but to hell with profits, you'd rather they just accept higher costs, grin, bear it, and take it up the ass, just like you expect all the evil rich people in this country to do.
1/10/2013 2:03:13 PM
And then the competitor goes out of business because their margins are too thin and they can't grow or expand their market. Then the first person who passes on their cost becomes one of only a couple of vendors, which leads them to be accused of a monopoly and price gouging.
1/10/2013 2:07:17 PM
1/11/2013 1:04:29 AM
1/11/2013 1:42:42 AM
And if any option on the table was a free market solution with no government intervention then this would be relevant.But they aren't so it's not.
1/11/2013 6:08:37 AM
1/11/2013 9:24:32 AM
We need socialized healthcare, not this privatization shit.
3/11/2013 4:23:51 PM
I don't have any interested in pooling risk with people that don't give a shit about their health or their body.I don't mind if someone wants to blow up to 500 lbs and die at age 40. I think it's sad and I can empathize with them and the people in their lives that will be affected, but it's not my place to say they can't or shouldn't do it. If you're going to hold a gun to my head and say that I have to help them pay for the consequences of their actions, it becomes my problem. It's not a problem I asked for, though. I don't want any part of your grandiose vision where everyone does what's right for "the greater good", and "society" is becomes synonymous with "all individuals ruled by the same government".Socialized health care works (relatively) well in a small country where people are already fairly healthy. It would work horribly in a giant country where the majority of people know more about optimizing calorie intake at Golden Corral than the fundamentals of nutrition.[Edited on March 11, 2013 at 5:45 PM. Reason : ]
3/11/2013 5:43:35 PM
luckily you not wanting to be forced to pay for something is pretty insignificant
3/11/2013 5:48:53 PM
Yes, I'm aware that you don't consider other people or their concerns. That just makes you an asshole, it says nothing about the rightness or wrongness of your position.
3/11/2013 5:51:29 PM
^^^ you realize under ANY system, you pool risk with unhealthy people?It's why emergency rooms charge so much (not because they're dicks, but because they're making up for the free healthcare they give poor people). This is an implicit form of risk pooling.You could argue that Hospitals shouldn't provide care to people who can't pay, but you'd be imposing your own morals onto the hospitals, since i bet most of them would do so voluntarily.[Edited on March 11, 2013 at 5:56 PM. Reason : ]
3/11/2013 5:55:53 PM
^^ I do consider other people's concerns, which is why i think we need socialized medicine. you do not consider other people's concerns, only your own. you are an asshole.
3/11/2013 5:57:21 PM